David Mac
3.6K posts


@vanikehuman Never read any DeLillo. The Names is in the top of my list. Why Libra?
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@PamphletsY Fewer Europeans are buying this fake Russia narrative, though all their leaders still do (or pretend to).
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David Mac retweetledi
David Mac retweetledi

@CompassOffice Only a fool would trust Labour to honour a deal. (And Labour aren't progressive).
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The movement to beat Reform requires progressives to work together, not be adversaries.
thetimes.com/uk/politics/ar…
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The Road to Wigan Keir - @philbc3:
“At first contact with re-entry into national politics, the great hope of the soft left has capitulated across the board… He looks as clueless and as spineless as the man he would replace.” averypublicsociologist.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-ro…
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David Mac retweetledi

This is literally on your website

Rep. Nancy Mace@RepNancyMace
America FIRST. Not Somalia. Not India. Not China. Not anywhere else.
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@egcrossan @jemgilbert Perhaps they remember that the last "rhetorical leftward turn" was Sir Keir's! His lies have made it harder to trust his successors.
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@jemgilbert The rise of a left-populist Green Party causes a sharp rhetorical leftward turn within Labour and the (probable) demise of Starmer... and some comrades seem to think this is a bad thing 😅
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The extent to which Burnham-scepticism is being framed in these biblical terms is a symptom of non-seriousness. We need to be very sceptical about Burnham. But if the best you’ve got is ‘he’s not Jesus / Moses’ then you’re making no effort to engage with supporters in good faith.
Alex Niven@Alex_Niven
Not sure that ‘does Andy Burnham live up to a bowdlerised scramble of biblical metaphors for God’ is an entirely fair or serious test of his merits or otherwise
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@joecguinan What's left of the Labour membership will buy Burnham's schtick. (They voted for Starmer!) Wider electorate less likely to fall for it.
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@SolHughesWriter Heller is no radical (more likely a reactionary) but it is an amazing depiction of the effects of a corporate hierarchy on the individual.
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Condemning the Tommy Robinson's rally, Muslim Council of Britain said "why is this rhetoric tolerated and even defended when it comes to Muslims, when the equivalent, directed at any other group, would rightly be met with prosecution, condemnation, and unequivocal political consequence?"
middleeasteye.pulse.ly/tj3b3ez3vl
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@AydinDikerdem Labour led by another Blairite isthe lesser evil. Again? What a platform.
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I think Andy is the only person that can stop a Reform government. I’m all in.
Andy Burnham@AndyBurnhamGM
Politics isn’t working for places like ours. I will change that. #AndyBurnham #ForUs
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@joecguinan To be fair, this guy seems more Sadiq Khan centrist than Labour left.
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Total abdication of strategic thinking. This is why the Labour left is wrecked beyond salvation.
Aydin Dikerdem@AydinDikerdem
I think Andy is the only person that can stop a Reform government. I’m all in.
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Keir Starmer does not want the Makerfield by-election to be an explicit referendum on whether he should remain prime minister.
Which is why he has - just now - ruled out setting a timetable for his own resignation even if Andy Burnham wins that by-election.
Truthfully this is Olympic level straw-clutching. It will be just such a referendum, whatever the PM says.
As a tactic it reminds me of David Cameron vowing he would not quit if he were to lose the Brexit referendum.
What transpired was that Cameron resigned within hours of being trounced by Johnson, Farage and Cummings.
But some kind of amour propre is preserved by Starmer’s refusal to pledge to surrender the throne after one more battle.
Starmer also says that if someone - say Burnham - were to get the requisite 81 nominations and were to trigger a leadership contest, he would join the fray and fight.
If he is to be taken at his word, this isn’t just any old hard ball, but is death-match stuff, with the survival of the Labour Party in the frame.
All the important trade union leaders want Starmer to quit, as do a significant number of Labour MPs (I am not going to say “most” because reliable data is not available, though the party is conspicuously split).
Starmer is saying “bring it on, if you’re hard enough.” And we have to assume that the Evertonian Burnham believes he is.
Starmer’s weekend of ruminating about his future at Chequers has not introduced much in the way of self doubt, for all that he is surrounded by those who doubt him.
That is a genius of sorts. Hats off.
Maybe as and when Burnham becomes an MP again, he will have the revelation that Starmer and Starmerism are a winning combination, despite the contrary evidence of multiple elections.
And possibly Streeting, and Rayner, and Miliband will suddenly surrender any ambition to lead and change the course adopted by their party.
Anything is possible in these volatile times. Though I wouldn’t attach a high probability to an outcome that increases Starmer’s job security.
What is highly probable is that if Burnham wins and Starmer says he ain’t budging, we may witness the kind of mayhem that could destroy Labour.
I am not exaggerating.
Their party is so ideologically riven and so weakened by factionalism that an emotional leadership contest that barks like civil war may put paid to any rolling back of the stone and any escape from the grave.
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The problem any Labour candidate has now, post- Starmer, is that no-one has any reason to believe a word that comes out of their mouths. We got shafted by Starmer, we're not going to get shafted again by Burnham.
Wicc'InTh'ead🇭🇺🇵🇸@InWicc
I can't believe people are falling for this shit again. Starmer conned the Labour membership by promoting a progressive platform then lurched to the right once he was elected. Burnham is a Blairite and will do exactly the same. You can see it coming.
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